Policymakers
in sentence
3364 examples of Policymakers in a sentence
And, of course, the new scoring will also be important to the companies themselves, and for
policymakers
who are trying to strike a balance between “pull” incentives and current priority-drug needs.
European competition law in particular allows
policymakers
to intervene at will, increasing uncertainty, damaging wealth creation and consumer well-being.
Most
policymakers
still focus on GDP, because, while not perfect, it is strongly correlated with highly prized real-world outcomes.
The reason is simple: Americans’ longstanding suspicion of “big government” morphed into a kind of political self-hatred, with
policymakers
and citizens alike led to believe that government is at its best when it does not govern.
European policymakers, including Jean-Claude Trichet, the ECB’s former president, have suggested that Ireland’s dogged commitment to austerity is a model for others.
The fact that the country has again become fashionable reflects the confusion in eurozone policymakers’ economic thinking and the folly of imitation across think tanks and international institutions.
And yet, despite their high cost and low efficacy, walls remain popular among
policymakers
and politicians.
In 1996, a series of lawsuits forced tobacco companies to release millions of internal documents, which confirmed what public-health advocates and
policymakers
had long suspected: as early as the 1950s, the industry knew that nicotine was addictive and that cigarettes caused cancer.
Business leaders and
policymakers
can develop and deploy the technologies they want, according to their institutional needs.
Chinese
policymakers
have been hoping to develop the renminbi’s role in international finance, in order to strengthen China’s geopolitical standing, since the 1990s.
How and when this transformation will happen – and how to manage its far-reaching effects – are questions that keep scholars and
policymakers
up at night.
Unfortunately, monetary policymakers’ effort to operationalize the objective of ensuring that the value of money remains stable has taken on a life of its own.
Only an equally complex and highly adaptable monetary-policy approach – one that emphasizes risk management and reliance on policymakers’ judgment, rather than a clear-cut formula – can do that.
Indeed, if
policymakers
continue to sit on their hands, it is not hard to imagine a sharp global slowdown or even a devastating financial crisis.
Policymakers
should have been alert to the likelihood of this mediocre outcome.
As a result, analysts and
policymakers
have started mooting ideas for unconventional fiscal policy to supplement unconventional monetary policy.
So
policymakers
need to provide them with an incentive not to.
Another approach for
policymakers
is to quantify the economic benefits of “ecosystem services” – the miraculous yet mundane things that nature provides like erosion control, water management, and purification.
Educational
policymakers
should therefore use these findings to guide policy.
The orthodox agriculture-led growth strategy of the 1960’s, the favored antidote to five decades of a “happy peasant” aid doctrine, must be replaced with an agribusiness development strategy whereby policymakers, donors, and entrepreneurs target the entire value chain to support a shift from bulk products to value-added, agro-industrial manufactured products.
Rather,
policymakers
should figure out how much renewable energy is worth to society (possibly attributing a different value to solar, wind, geothermal and biomass) and make utilities or governments pay extra for it.
As science makes clear how imperative the climate question is, it is time for economists and
policymakers
to explain how it can be answered.
What would have normally remained a subject for post-seminar small talk has, however, become a topic for discussion by journalists, commentators, and
policymakers.
A few months ago, Olivier Blanchard, the International Monetary Fund’s chief economist, had already criticized his colleagues and
policymakers
in advanced countries for systematically underestimating the recessionary impact of fiscal consolidation programs.
So the message to
policymakers
was confusing.
Researchers are tempted by persuasive results that can attract the interest of policymakers, who are tempted by a selective reading of the evidence that can provide them with ammunition in domestic and international debate.
It is not too late for international and national
policymakers
to reconsider their strategies.
The Right Question About Inequality and GrowthCAMBRIDGE – The belief that inequality hurts economic growth is gaining currency among
policymakers.
The former is of interest to social scientists and historians, but it is the latter that is relevant for
policymakers.
Rather than concerning themselves with how to balance growth and inequality,
policymakers
would do better to focus on how policies impact average incomes and other welfare indicators.
Back
Next
Related words
Should
Their
Economic
Growth
Financial
Would
Which
Global
About
Countries
World
Economy
Other
Crisis
Monetary
Policy
Fiscal
Could
There
Markets